Medal of Honor Recipient: Sergeant Robert McPhelan
Rank and organization: Sergeant, Company E, 5th U.S.
Infantry. Place and date: At Cedar Creek, etc., Mont., 21 October 1876 to 8 January 1877. Entered service at:------.
Birth: Ireland.
Date of issue: 27 April 1877.
Citation: Gallantry in action.
Medal of Honor Recipient: Sergeant Dennis W. Hickey
Rank and organization: Sergeant, Company E, 2d New
York Cavalry. Place and date: At Stony Creek Bridge, Va., 29 June 1864. Entered service
at:------. Birth: Troy, N.Y. Date of issue: 18 April 1891.
Citation: With a
detachment of 3 men, tore up the bridge at Stony Creek being the last man on
the bridge and covering the retreat until he was shot down.
Medal of Honor Recipient: Commander Ernest Edwin Evans
Rank and organization: Commander, U.S. Navy. Born: 13 August 1908, Pawnee, Okla. Accredited to: Oklahoma.
Other Navy
awards: Navy Cross, Bronze Star Medal.
Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and
intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty as commanding
officer of the U.S.S. Johnston in action against major units of the enemy
Japanese fleet during the battle off Samar on 25 October 1944. The first to lay
a smokescreen and to open fire as an enemy task force, vastly superior in
number, firepower and armor, rapidly approached. Comdr. Evans gallantly
diverted the powerful blasts of hostile guns from the lightly armed and armored
carriers under his protection, launching the first torpedo attack when the Johnston came under
straddling Japanese shellfire. Undaunted by damage sustained under the terrific
volume of fire, he unhesitatingly joined others of his group to provide fire
support during subsequent torpedo attacks against the Japanese and, outshooting
and outmaneuvering the enemy as he consistently interposed his vessel between
the hostile fleet units and our carriers despite the crippling loss of engine
power and communications with steering aft, shifted command to the fantail,
shouted steering orders through an open hatch to men turning the rudder by hand
and battled furiously until the Johnston, burning and shuddering from a mortal
blow, lay dead in the water after 3 hours of fierce combat. Seriously wounded
early in the engagement, Comdr. Evans, by his indomitable courage and brilliant
professional skill, aided materially in turning back the enemy during a
critical phase of the action. His valiant fighting spirit throughout this
historic battle will venture as an inspiration to all who served with him.
Medal of Honor Recipient: Private First Class Kenneth Michael Kays
Rank and organization: Private First Class, U.S. Army,
Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry, 101st
Airborne Division. place and date: Thua Thien province, Republic of Vietnam,
7 May 1970.
Entered service at: Fairfield,
Ill. Born: 22 September 1949, Mount Vernon, Ill.
Citation:
For conspicuous gallantry intrepidity in action at the risk of his life above
and beyond the call of duty. Pfc. (then Pvt.) Kays distinguished himself while
serving as a medical aidman with Company D, 1st Battalion, 101st Airborne
Division near Fire Support Base Maureen. A heavily armed force of enemy sappers
and infantrymen assaulted Company D's night defensive position, wounding and
killing a number of its members. Disregarding the intense enemy fire and ground
assault, Pfc. Kays began moving toward the perimeter to assist his fallen
comrades. In doing so he became the target of concentrated enemy fire and
explosive charges, 1 of which severed the lower portion of his left leg. After
applying a tourniquet to his leg, Pfc. Kays moved to the fire-swept perimeter,
administered medical aid to 1 of the wounded, and helped move him to an area of
relative safety. Despite his severe wound and excruciating pain, Pfc. Kays
returned to the perimeter in search of other wounded men. He treated another
wounded comrade, and, using his own body as a shield against enemy bullets and
fragments, moved him to safety. Although weakened from a great loss of blood,
Pfc. Kays resumed his heroic lifesaving efforts by moving beyond the company's
perimeter into enemy held territory to treat a wounded American lying there.
Only after his fellow wounded soldiers had been treated and evacuated did Pfc.
Kays allow his own wounds to be treated. These courageous acts by Pfc. Kays
resulted in the saving of numerous lives and inspired others in his company to
repel the enemy. Pfc. Kays' heroism at the risk of his life are in keeping with
the highest traditions of the service and reflect great credit on him, his
unit, and the U.S. Army.
Medal of Honor Recipient: Private Samuel D. Phillips
Rank and organization: Private, Company H, 2d U.S.
Cavalry. Place and date: At Muddy Creek, Mont., 7 May 1877. Entered service at: ------. Birth: Butler County, Ohio.
Date of issue: 8 August 1877.
Citation: Gallantry in action.
Medal of Honor Recipient: First Lieutenant Welis H. Blodgett
Rank and organization: First Lieutenant, Company D,
37th Illinois Infantry. Place and date: At Newtonia, Mo., 30 September 1862. Entered service at: Chicago, Ill.
Born: 29 January 1839,
Downers Grove, Ill. Date of issue: 15 February 1894.
Citation: With a
single orderly, captured an armed picket of 8 men and marched them in
prisoners.
Medal of Honor Recipient: Second Lieutenant James R. Durham
Rank and organization: Second Lieutenant, Company E,
12th West Virginia Infantry. Place and date: At Winchester, Va., 14 June 1863. Entered
service at: Clarksburg,
W. Va. Born: 7 February 1833,
Richmond, W.
Va. Date of issue: 6 March
1890.
Citation: Led his command over the stone wall, where he was
wounded.
Medal of Honor Recipient: Sergeant Elbert Luther Kinser
Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Marine Corps
Reserve. Born: 21 October
1922, Greeneville,
Tenn. Accredited to: Tennessee.
Citation: For
conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond
the call of duty while acting as leader of a Rifle Platoon, serving with
Company I, 3d Battalion, 1st Marines, 1st Marine Division, in action against
Japanese forces on Okinawa Shima in the Ryukyu Chain, 4 May 1945. Taken under
sudden, close attack by hostile troops entrenched on the reverse slope while
moving up a strategic ridge along which his platoon was holding newly won
positions, Sgt. Kinser engaged the enemy in a fierce hand grenade battle. Quick
to act when a Japanese grenade landed in the immediate vicinity, Sgt. Kinser
unhesitatingly threw himself on the deadly missile, absorbing the full charge
of the shattering explosion in his own body and thereby protecting his men from
serious injury and possible death. Stouthearted and indomitable, he had yielded
his own chance of survival that his comrades might live to carry on the
relentless battle against a fanatic enemy. His courage, cool decision and
valiant spirit of self-sacrifice in the face of certain death sustained and
enhanced the highest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service. He gallantly gave
his life for his country.
Medal of Honor Recipient: Hospital Corpsman Second Class David Robert Ray
Rank and organization: Hospital Corpsman Second Class,
U.S. Navy, 2d Battalion, 11th Marines, 1st Marine Division (Rein), FMF. Place
and date: Quang Nam Province,
Republic of Vietnam, 19 March 1969. Entered service at: Nashville,
Tenn. Born: 14 February 1945, McMinnville, Tenn.
Citation: For conspicuous
gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of
duty while serving as a HC2c. with Battery D, 2d Battalion, at Phu Loc 6, near
An Hoa. During the early morning hours, an estimated battalion-sized enemy
force launched a determined assault against the battery's position, and
succeeded in effecting a penetration of the barbed-wire perimeter. The initial
burst of enemy fire caused numerous casualties among the marines who had
immediately manned their howitzers during the rocket and mortar attack.
Undaunted by the intense hostile fire, HC2c. Ray moved from parapet to parapet,
rendering emergency medical treatment to the wounded. Although seriously
wounded himself while administering first aid to a marine casualty, he refused
medical aid and continued his lifesaving efforts. While he was bandaging and
attempting to comfort another wounded marine, HC2c. Ray was forced to battle 2
enemy soldiers who attacked his position, personally killing 1 and wounding the
other. Rapidly losing his strength as a result of his severe wounds, he
nonetheless managed to move through the hail of enemy fire to other casualties.
Once again, he was faced with the intense fire of oncoming enemy troops and,
despite the grave personal danger and insurmountable odds, succeeded in
treating the wounded and holding off the enemy until he ran out of ammunition,
at which time he sustained fatal wounds. HC2c. Ray's final act of heroism was
to protect the patient he was treating. He threw himself upon the wounded
marine, thus saving the man's life when an enemy grenade exploded nearby. By
his determined and persevering actions, courageous spirit, and selfless
devotion to the welfare of his marine comrades, HC2c. Ray served to inspire the
men of Battery D to heroic efforts in defeating the enemy. His conduct
throughout was in keeping with the finest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.
Medal of Honor Recipient: Second Lieutenant Powhatan H. Clarke
Rank and organization: Second Lieutenant, 10th U.S.
Cavalry. Place and date: At Pinito Mountains, Sonora, Mex., 3 May 1886. Entered service
at: Baltimore, Md. Birth: Alexandria, La.
Date of issue: 12 March 1891.
Citation: Rushed forward to the rescue of a soldier who was severely wounded
and lay, disabled, exposed to the enemy's fire, and carried him to a place of
safety
Medal of Honor Recipient: Pilot John H. Ferrell
Rank and organization: Pilot, U.S.
Navy. Entered service at: Illinois.
Born: 15 April 1823,
Tennessee.
G.O. No.: 59, 22 June 1865.
Citation: Served on board the U.S. Monitor Neosho during the engagement with
enemy batteries at Bells Mills, Cumberland River,
near Nashville, Tenn., 6 December 1864. Carrying out his duties
courageously during the engagement, Ferrell gallantly left the pilothouse after
the flag and signal staffs of that vessel had been shot away and, taking the
flag which was drooping over the wheelhouse, make it fast to the stump of the
highest mast remaining although the ship was still under a heavy fire from the
enemy.